
Efficacy Comparison of Some New Natural-Product Herbicides for Weed
Control at Two Growth Stages
H. F. H. Abouziena, A. A. M. Omar, S. D. Sharma and
M. Singh
Abstract
There is an urgent need to accelerate the development and implementation
of effective organic-compliant herbicides that are environmentally safe
and that help the producer meet increasing consumer demand for organic
products.
Therefore, greenhouse experiments were conducted to evaluate the effectiveness
of acetic acid (5%), acetic acid (30%), citric acid (10%), citric acid
(5%) + garlic (0.2%), citric acid (10%) + garlic (0.2%), clove oil (45.6%),
and corn gluten meal (CGM) compounds as natural-product herbicides for
weed control.
The herbicides were applied to the broadleaf weeds stranglervine, wild
mustard, black nightshade, sicklepod, velvetleaf, and redroot pigweed
and to narrowleaf weeds crowfootgrass, Johnsongrass, annual ryegrass,
goosegrass, green foxtail, and yellow nutsedge. The herbicides were
applied POST at two weed growth stages, namely, two to four and four
to six true-leaf stages. CGM was applied PPI in two soil types.
Citric acid (5%) + garlic (0.2%) had the greatest control (98%) of
younger broadleaf weeds, followed by acetic acid (30%)>CGM>citric
acid (10%)>acetic acid (5%)>citric acid (10%) + garlic (0.2%),
and clove oil.
Wild mustard was most sensitive to these herbicides, whereas redroot
pigweed was the least sensitive. Herbicides did not control narrowleaf
weeds except for acetic acid (30%) when applied early POST (EPOST) and
CGM. Acetic acid (30%) was phytotoxic to all broadleaf weeds and most
narrowleaf weeds when applied EPOST.
Delayed application until the four- to six-leaf stage significantly
reduced efficacy; acetic acid was less sensitive to growth stage than
other herbicides.
These results will help to determine effective natural herbicides for
controlling weeds in organic farming.
Source
Weed Technology (2009)
23: 431–437
Posted September 2009